The Trustees of the Freeholders and Commonalty of the Town of Brookhaven, and diaries A. Post, their lessee, bring this action of trespass against Wilson R. Smith, John Morgan and Albert W. Pell, for building a pier upon certain lands under water, in the Great South bay, of which the plaintiff, the Town of Brookhaven, is concededly seized in fee under royal grants, dated in 1666, 1686 and 1693 respectively. The defendant Smith is the owner of a piece of upland, bounded on high-water mark, his title being derived, it appears, under a patent dated in 1697, four years after the last grant to the town of Brookhaven of the lands under water in Great South bay. The plaintiffs have been given a judgment in the present action, the defendants appealing.
There is practically no dispute as to the facts. The appellants Morgan and Pell say in their brief that they “ do not dispute the fact that the respondent corporation is the owner of lands upon which the trespass is alleged to have been committed or that the respondent, Post, under a written lease was entitled to possession thereof, but assert that said ownership and possession of respondent was subject to navigation and the riparian rights of appellants,” and that “ this appeal squarely brings before this court for determination the question as to whether an owner of upland adjoining navigable water has the right to erect an appropriate and suitable dock into such water for the purposes of navigation without the consent of the owner of the soil under water.” While there is some slight difference of opinion as to the stipulation in reference to the character of the dock which has, in fact, been erected by the defendants, it may be said, for the purposes of this discussion, that the plaintiffs concede that if the defendants have the right to construct a dock at all upon their premises the one now existing is a proper dock, so that the case presents but a single broad question as to the rights of the parties in the lands lying between high-water mark and the navigable portions of Great South bay.
It is well settled in our jurisprudence that the laws which subsist at the time and place of making a contract, and where it is to be performed, enter into and form a part of it, as if they were expressly referred to and incorporated in its terms, and that this principle embraces alike those which affect its validity, construction, *214discharge and enforcement. ( Von Hoffman v. City of Quincy, 4 Wall. 535, 550 ; Pritchard v. Horton, 106 U. S. 124, 132, 133, and authorities there cited ; Barnitz v. Beverly, 163 id. 118, 125, and authorities cited.) Our State Constitution, after providing that all grants of land within this State, made by the King of Great Britain, or persons acting under his authority, after the 14th day of October, 1775, should be null and void, declares that “ nothing contained in this Constitución shall affect any grants of land within this State, made by the authority of the said king or his predecessors, or shall annul any charters to bodies politic and corporate, by him or them made, before that day; or shall affect any such grants or charters since made by this State, or by persons acting under its authority ; or shall impair the obligation of any debts, contracted by the State, or individuals, or bodies corporate, or any other rights of property, or any suits, actions, rights of action, or other proceedings in courts of justice.” (Const. N. Y. art. 1, § 17.) The grants of land to the town of Brookhaven, thus constitutionally ratified and confirmed, constituted contracts within the meaning of subdivision 1 of section 10 of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States, the obligations of which the State could not impair (Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87,137; Danolds v. State of New York, 89 N. Y. 36, 45, and authorities there cited), so that we are obliged to look to the law as it stood when these grants were made to determine what estate vested in the town of Brookhaven. If the town took a fee to the lands under water, or to the lands below high-water mark, it is difficult to understand how the defendants could gain any better right to trespass upon that fee than they would have to trespass upon the fee of a neighbor whose land was not covered by water, and 'while it is undoubtedly true that the defendants would have the right ’ of transit over waters navigable in law, this is not a right to appropriate the land under such water to the exclusive use of the defendants by the construction of a dock which must, in the nature of things, interfere with the equal rights of others to the full use of the waters for the purposes of navigation.
In the case of Yates v. Milwaukee (10 Wall. 497, 504) it was said of a riparian owner upon the Milwaukee river that “ whether the title of the owner of such a lot extends beyond the dry land or not, he is certainly entitled to the rights of a riparian proprietor, *215whose land is bounded by a navigable stream, and among those rights are access to the navigable part of the river from the front of his lot, the right to make a landing, wharf or pier for his own use or for the use of the public, subject to such general rules and regulations as the Legislature may see proper to impose for the protection of the rights of the public, whatever those may be.” The Supreme Court of Wisconsin ( Walker v. Shepardson, 4 Wis. 486) had previously held, in harmony with the doctrine of the common law (Smith v. City of Rochester, 92 N. Y. 463, 473,479, and authorities cited), that the title of the owner of such a lot extends to the center of the stream, subject to the easement of the public in its use for navigation, and that he “ may therefore construct docks or landing places for goods or passengers, taking care that vessels employed in navigating the stream are not impeded in their passage nor prevented from the use of all parts of the stream which are navigable,” which is but another way of saying that every man may use his own property in what manner soever may please him, so long as he does not interfere with the rights of the public or those of his neighbor. In other words, “ Rivers not navigable, that is, fresh rivers of what kind soever, do of common right belong to the owners of the soil adjacent to the extent of their land in length. But salt rivers, where the tide ebbs and flows, belong of common right to the State. That this ownership of the citizen is of the whole river, viz., the soil and the water of the river, except that in his river where boats, rafts, etc., may be floated to market, the public have a right of way or easement.” (See Smith v. City of Rochester, supra, 479.) The public having an easement only in the Milwaukee river, and it being an elementary principle that all easements are limited to the very purpose for which they were created, and their enjoyment cannot be extended by implication (Smith v. City of Rochester, supra, 484), it followed naturally and inevitably that the owner of a lot bordering upon the stream could not be deprived of the right of constructing a dock over his own premises to the navigable portion of the stream, unless such dock interfered with the public easement of navigation. If the city of Milwaukee had owned the fee to the bed of the river, and had been demanding judgment against a trespasser, the decision of the court would have been controlling here, but a mere attempt on the part of the court to define the rights of a riparian owner, in *216a case where the city was attempting to exercise an authority over the construction of docks along the water front, involving no question as to the rights of the owners of the fee, is not such an authority as to compel us to hold that the defendants in the present case were justified in trespassing upon the premises of the plaintiffs.
But rivers in which the tide does not ebb and flow are essentially different, as a matter of law, from tidewaters. Fresh-water rivers are navigable or non-navigable as a matter of fact; they are navigable if they are capable of affording navigation, and they are made highways by statute for limited purposes (Matter of Burns, 155 N. Y. 23, 26), while salt rivers and tidewaters generally are navigable as a matter of law. A rule, therefore, which permitted riparian owners to build docks out to the navigable portions of a fresh-water river would not necessarily confer any rights upon the owners of uplands bounded on tidewaters, for the reason that the latter, being navigable in law, are navigable at every point covered by the water. But there was no such rule of law in respect to navigable waters as that suggested in Yates v. Milwaukee (swpra) at the time when the grant was made to the town of Brookhaven, and, as we have already suggested, the rights of the parties are to be determined by the law as it existed at the time that the grant was made. “ A grant, in its own nature,” says Chief Justice Markttat.t, in Fletcher v. Peck (supra), “ amounts to an extinguishment of the right of the grantor, and implies a contract not to reassert that right,” and the question here is what rights of property became vested in the town of Brookhaven by its several grants of lands under water, for whatever rights it then acquired still belong to it. The United States Supreme Court in Shively v. Bowlby (152 U. S. 1) had this subject under consideration, and it was declared upon a long line of cited authorities (p. 13) that in “ England, from the time of Lord Hale, it has been treated as settled that the title in the soil of the sea, or of arms of the sea, below ordinary high water mark, is in the King, except so far as an individual or a corporation has acquired rights in it by express grant, or by prescription or usage;. * * * and that this title, jus privatum, whether in the Ring or in a subject, is held subject to the public right, jus pvblAcwm, of navigation and fishing.” The same high authority declares it to be “ equally well settled that a grant from the sovereign *217of land bounded by the sea, or by any navigable tidewater, does not pass any title below high water mark, unless either the language of the grant, or long usage under it, clearly indicates that such was the intention.” It seems entirely clear, therefore, that at the time of making the grants to the town of Brookhaven, the King of England was the owner of the fee of the lands below high-water mark in Great South bay, and that he had power to convey an absolute title, subject only to the public easements of navigation and fishing, and the grants under which the town of Brookhaven took title constituted contracts, the obligations of which could not be interfered with by the State. Four years after the King of England, acting through his colonial governors, had disposed of all his interest in the lands under waters in Great South bay, the grant under which the defendants assert the right to trespass upon the lands of the plaintiff was made, and just how this could convey any right to the lands under water owned by the town of Brookhaven does not occur to us. By the law of England, as it existed at that time, every building or wharf erected without license below high-water mark, where the soil belongéd to the King, constituted a pnrpresture and might, at the suit of the King, be either demolished or be seized and rented for his benefit, if it did not constitute a nuisance to navigation (Shively v. Bowlby, supra, 13, and authorities there cited), and no reason suggests itself why the defendants should have a higher right against the grantees of the King than they would have had against the sovereign of Great Britain had lie continued the owner of the soil. “ Land, in its legal signification, has an indefinite extent upwards, so that, by a conveyance of land, all buildings, growing timber, and water, erected and being thereupon, shall likewise pass ” (Broom Leg. Max. [4th Eng. ed.] 382, and authorities cited in notes), and the town of Brookhaven in taking title to the lands under water, or below high-water mark, acquired all of the rights which the King of England had in such lands, which was an absolute right to its fullest enjoyment consistent with the public right of navigation and fishing. (See authority cited in Shively v. Bowlby, supra, 12, 13.) There was a right of passage over the water; it is probably true that there was a right of passage over the shore, for the owners of adjacent lands, which is the land between high and low-water mark (Shively v. Bowlby, supra, 12), *218in reaching the water, but beyond this the riparian owner has no higher rights than those of the general public, this being determined by recent judgments in the House of Lords, and recognized as the common law of England by our courts. (Shively v. Bowlby, supra, 14, and authorities there cited.)
The construction of a dock, while it may be useful to individuals engaged in navigation, is not involved in the public right of navigation as understood by the law; navigation is defined by Bouvier (2 Boirv. L. Diet. [2d ed.] 196) as “ whatever relates to traversing the sea in ships; the art of ascertaining the geographical position of a ship, and directing her course,” while the American and English Encyclopsedia of Law (Yol. 21 [2d ed.], 445) declares that “to navigate means to steer, direct or manage a vessel, and implies that the act is done by those on board of the vessel itself.” We understand by the right of navigation the right to pass over waters freely and without obstructions. This right belongs to all craft, whether large or small, where the waters are in fact or in law navigable, and there can be no right on the part of a riparian owner, or others, without the consent of the owners of the title to the lands, to erect any structure which shall interfere with this right, or which shall interfere with the absolute right of property in the owner of the lands. While usage or positive statutes in individual States where the right -to lands under waters is vested in the State may justify the construction of docks and wharves out to the navigable portions of streams or waterways, no authority controlling here has ever held that where the title to lands under water was vested in an individual or a corporation, an owner of lands bounded by high water had a right to trespass upon such lands and construct a permanent dock. We think the defendants have no such right in the case now before us.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.